Title: BULLY NO MORE
1BULLY NO MORE
2AIMS
- To identify what bullying is about
- Why people get bullied
- What they feel about it
- How they respond in bullying situations
- To see what we can do to help as pupils, as
teachers and as parents - To set the record that bullying is unacceptable.
Pupils must tell someone, parents, teachers
other pupils must react
3What is bullying?
4Does bullying rest in the nature of the incident
or in the attitude of the perpetrator?
- One of the girls describes some incidents as
normal stuff. What do you regard as normal?
At what point does normal become bullying? - Is behaviour tolerated at school which could not
be tolerated at home or vice versa? - Are there natural victims?
- Is the experience of the children in the video
similar to the experience in your school? - Are there aspects of your own behaviour which you
might regard as normal and others might find tend
towards bullying?
5What is bullying?
6Why do people get bullied?
7Does bullying arise solely from individual
personalities or from certain characteristics of
institutions and society?
- What is the balance between the individual and
their behaviour and the wider social context in
which they operate? - Do bullied children give full explanations of
what has happened to them? Is it useful to help
them talk about their experiences? - Are the reasons given by the children adequate
explanations for the causes of bullying? - Why did the bullies behave as they did?
- Is there anything in your school which makes
bullying unlikely?
8How does being bullied feel?
- What did you feel about it?
9How should we assess what people tell us about
bullying and how should we support the expression
of difficult feelings?
- The children talk in this section in an
understated way. Why? How might they be helped
to talk? How much can we reliably interpret from
body language? - Are there some things which children do not say
or will not tell? - What language or behaviour help us identify the
bullied children? - Is there anything which the children say which is
mirrored in our own experience? - What is the school doing to support children in
expressing their full feelings?
10What can you do to help?
11Impress your friends
12Supporting a positive involvement and
contribution from friends
- How effective are the actions taken by the
friends in this video? - What difficulties may there be for a friend of a
bullied child, or of a bully? - What can be done to help the apparently
friendless child? - Is there a role for parents or school in
supporting the action of friends? - How might a schools anti-bullying policy
recognise the role a friend might play?
13Defining a positive anti-bullying role for
teachers
- How far do the childrens experiences reflect
what would happen in your school? - What are the clearest signs of bullying? Why
might these be missed in a clasroom situation?
How does a teacher ensure they are not missed? - How should teachers respond to pupils who report
bullying of their friends? - What are the boundaries between authority,
discipline and bullying in a teacher? - Should an anti-bullying policy include means of
monitoring teacher responses and actions?
14What else is being done at CCHS?
15Guilty or not guilty?
16How can parents help?
17How can parents help?
18Identifying a positive role for parents and
understanding the difficulties which they may face
- Given that children often hide the full extend of
what is happening to them, how can parents
recognise the full signs of bullying? - What kinds of response can a parent make?
- What parental responses and actions might a
bullied child find acceptable, difficult,
intrusive, unhelpful? - How near, on occasions, have you been to
bullying? Have you experienced bullying in a
work situation?
19Can bullying be stopped?
20Examining definitions of bullying in school and
in life
- Is bullying an incident or an attitude and
intention? - Is there a low level of teasing or bullying-type
behaviour which can be tolerated? - What strategies are available to modify the
behaviour of a bully? - Should a school Anti-bullying policy take account
of persistent teasing, pranks, childish
horseplay? Dows including these weaken awareness
of serious bullying?
21Bullying can be stopped
- We have identified and investigated
- What bullying is about
- Why people get bullied
- What they feel about it
- How they respond in bullying situations
- What we can do to help as pupils, as teachers and
as parents - That bullying is unacceptable. Pupils must tell
someone, parents, teachers other pupils must
react